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Lighting and Storytelling

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Title: Lighting and Storytelling


1
Lighting and Storytelling
  • The influence of Lighting Design
  • On Dramaturgy

2
Andrew Coulton
  • Trained at QMUC in Stage Management and Theatre
    Production
  • Worked in a variety of Lighting and Production
    Management roles for theatre, music, dance and
    events
  • Manager of PROScenia, Lighting and Production
    Management Company

3
Aims
  • To introduce students to the roles of members of
    the Lighting Department, and the ways in which
    their efforts contribute to the creative process.
  • To introduce the basic principles of lighting and
    explore ways in which it can enhance and support
    storytelling.
  • To introduce differing styles of Lighting Design
    and explore how this can inform the genre and
    style of the performance.

4
Targets
  • By the end of the session, the student
  • Will be aware of the different roles within a
    Lighting department
  • Will have a basic understanding of the main
    creative properties of light and how these can be
    manipulated
  • Will have been introduced to different styles of
    lighting design and the ways in which the style
    of lighting can interact with the style of the
    piece.
  • Will understand the outline of the Lighting
    Design process
  • Will have demonstrated methods of communicating
    information through lighting

5
The Power of Light
  • Lighting is one of the most flexible, powerful
    tools of modern Stage Design
  • Dates back to the earliest days of theatre, and
    continues to develop with technology
  • Now offers incredible opportunities to
    communicate with an audience, and to create
    stunning, instantaneous, transformations
  • Always important to remember the main function of
    light onstage is to allow us to see

6
The Lighting Department
Director
Set / Costume Designer
Lighting Designer
Production Electrician
Relighter
Operator / Programmer
Technicians
7
Lighting Designer
  • Part of the core creative team
  • Responsible for overall look of lighting design
  • Partially creative, partially technical
  • Involved from start of design process to Press
    Night

Director
Lighting Designer
Production Electrician
Relighter
Operator / Programmer
Technicians
8
Production Electrician
  • Responsible for practical realisation of design
  • Assists and advises on practicalities and
    alternative solutions
  • Technical design / construction of practicals and
    effects
  • Co-ordinates kit, schedules etc

Director
Lighting Designer
Production Electrician
Relighter
Operator / Programmer
Technicians
9
Relighter
  • Adapts lighting design to touring venues
  • Tries to create same effects under differing
    conditions
  • Often a role held by another member of team eg SM
    or LX Operator

Director
Lighting Designer
Production Electrician
Relighter
Operator / Programmer
Technicians
10
Lighting Operator / Programmer
  • Programs Lighting Desk and operates cues for show
  • May take manual and visual / feelie cues
  • Often works out programming steps to produce a
    specific visual effect

Director
Lighting Designer
Production Electrician
Relighter
Operator / Programmer
Technicians
11
Technicians
  • Operate and maintain all equipment
  • May have floor cues during show eg changing
    colours, plugging up equipment etc
  • May operate Follow-spots

Director
Lighting Designer
Production Electrician
Relighter
Operator / Programmer
Technicians
12
Properties of Light
  • There are several basic properties of light
  • By manipulating and combining these, the Lighting
    Designer creates the desired look
  • Most powerful tool of all is contrast
    everything is relative
  • To what has gone before
  • To what else we can see

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Intensity / Shadow
  • Focus is generally drawn to brighter areas
  • Shadow is as effective as Intensity in creating
    mood and atmosphere
  • Humans cant hear what they cant see
  • Often important to create the impression of
    shadow without being dark.

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Colour
  • Can be thought of as mood temperatures
  • Warm ColoursAnger, Passion, Content
  • Cold ColoursFear, Isolation, Sadness
  • Absence of colour can also be powerful
  • Contrasting colours can create bright shadows
  • Established colour conventions can help or hinder
    designs

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Angle
  • Light from the front flattens contours and
    reduces depth
  • Light from sides, above or below gives shape and
    form and creates interesting shadows
  • Light from behind highlights outline and has a
    halo quality

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Source Where Light Comes From
  • Light travels in depressingly straight lines
  • Controlling where the light comes from is the
    only way to control where it goes
  • Sidelighting and Footlighting can lift things out
    of the background

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Source What Light Comes From
  • Practical lightsources are a good shorthand
  • Also consider effect of seeing, or not seeing,
    theatrical lightsources.
  • Allow rapid placement of time, place, period and
    more
  • The logic of the lighting design can reinforce or
    contrast with visible lightsources

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Focus Tight / Wide
  • Tightly focused lighting can create a Zooming
    in effect
  • It can also create different locations, or a
    sense of isolation and distance
  • Wide focused lighting feels more natural

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Quality Soft/Hard, Diffuse/Directional
  • Controlling the quality of light controls the
    subtlety of the effect
  • Hard edges, or strongly directional light, are
    very obvious
  • Soft edges, or diffuse light, are more natural
    and subtle
  • Hard edges can also be used for effect

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36
Texture
  • Texture is a variation of colour or intensity
    across a field of light
  • Much natural light is textured in some way by
    shadows of objects
  • Textured light is more sculptural
  • Texture can give a lot of information
  • eg jail bars, light through windows

37
Properties of Light
38
Lighting Equipment
  • Several different types of light for different
    purposes
  • Lighting Designer will select equipment based on
    desired look, practical considerations, stock and
    budget
  • 4 Main types of light
  • Flood
  • PAR
  • Fresnel
  • Profile

39
Flood Light
  • Simplest Lightsource
  • Even coverage of large area eg cloths
  • Hard to control

40
PAR Can
  • Varying fixed sizes of lens, built into bulb
  • Oval shaped beam
  • Fast response time
  • Very bright and punchy
  • Lightweight and cheap

41
Fresnel
  • Soft edged beam
  • Variable focus from narrow to wide
  • Barn doors allow more precise focusing
  • Good light output

42
Profile
  • Variable sharpness
  • Variable or Fixed size
  • Shutters for precise shaping
  • Gobos for texture and image projection
  • Heavy, less light output than simpler units

43
New TechnologyMoving Lights, Projection and more
  • Modern technology allows much more flexibility in
    toolbox
  • Can be used for effects or to increase options
    from lighting rig
  • More variables mean much more planning and
    programming required for best effects

44
Communicating with Light
  • By combining and manipulating the properties of
    light, a lot of information can be communicated
  • Lighting design can enhance storytelling by
    creating or reinforcing visual imagery
  • Lighting can tell an audience about
  • Location
  • Time
  • Mood/Atmosphere
  • It can direct focus
  • and be used as a narrative device in its own right

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48
Location
  • Lighting can directly communicate physical
    location
  • Once associated with a location it can quickly
    return us there
  • The feel of the lighting can define our world
  • Real / Virtual
  • Historical / Contemporary / Futuristic
  • Homely / Industrial etc

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52
Time
  • Communicating a sense of time is one of the
    earliest uses of lighting
  • The human body clock takes a lot from visual cues
  • This allows rapid and easy communication of time
    to an audience

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54
Mood / Atmosphere
  • Lighting is very effective at manipulating mood
    and atmosphere
  • Subtle changes particularly in colour, angles,
    intensity and focus can create different moods

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56
Focus
  • Lighting can draw focus to a particular person or
    place
  • This can be used to direct the audiences
    attention
  • Or as a storytelling device to communicate the
    status of characters
  • Or to lift characters out of scenes for inner
    monologue / direct address scenes

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60
As a Narrative Device
  • Recurring Lighting states can be used like a
    musical Leitmotif
  • For example, Red light instead of blood in Romeo
    and Juliet
  • Where a convention like this is established it
    can be very powerful, but if the rules are broken
    it becomes confusing

61
Transition
  • The ability to change lighting states is one of
    the things that makes lighting such a powerful
    storytelling device
  • Remember that lighting is all about contrast
  • Changes in lighting state, and the subtlety (or
    not) with which they happen, can communicate a
    great deal of information
  • Even very subtle changes may not register but
    will have an effect on the audiences perceptions

62
Lighting Styles
  • Different theatrical genres have different
    lighting conventions
  • Lighting may follow the conventions of the piece
    or may break those boundaries

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64
Brechtian
  • Provoke mental rather than emotional response
  • Stage must be brightly lit at all times
  • Lightsources in view of audience
  • Lighting changes for passage of time or change of
    scene but no effects to create mood / atmosphere

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66
Naturalistic
  • Intention is to avoid theatricality
  • Lighting must fit with the logic of the world
  • Theatrical lightsources hidden from view
  • Does not prevent lighting for mood etc so long as
    the logic works
  • Naturalistic lighting effects can inform
    non-naturalistic storytelling

67
Realistic
  • Often misused in lighting terms to mean
    surrealistic, romantic, expressionist or
    exaggerated reality
  • Still a sense of reality, but more use of
    emotional and narrative lighting
  • In lighting terms often a halfway house between
    Brechtian and Naturalistic

68
Other Styles
  • Abstract / Absurd may have lighting directly at
    odds with the rationale of the world
  • Musical Theatre often very Romantic, with
    songstates primarily led by emotion rather than
    any kind of logic

69
Dont Forget Contrast!
  • Many productions mix styles of lighting and
    theatrical form
  • Contrast between styles or specific breaches of
    convention can be very powerful
  • Narrative devices and mood especially powerful
    when used sparingly eg in Brechtian pieces

70
The Lighting Process
  • Lighting Design process runs from early
    conception through to Press Night
  • Often Director and Set Designer will have a few
    sessions alone to agree overall design concepts
    before Lighting Designer joins

71
Text Analysis
  • All good design begins with the text
  • Lighting Designer will read several times to
    identify
  • Specific references
  • Locations
  • Times
  • Emotions, Styles etc
  • Plot!

72
Design Meetings, Sketching and Discussion
  • Lighting Designer will discuss concepts of style
    and form with creative team
  • May sketch out or describe ideas for particular
    lighting moments
  • May light modelbox to experiment and communicate

73
Rehearsals
  • Lighting Designer begins to visualise detailed
    lighting design, paying attention to
  • Blocking
  • Style and Form
  • Rhythm and Pace
  • Points for lighting changes
  • And continues discussions with Set Designer and
    Director about design concepts
  • LX Department begin building practicals and
    sourcing equipment

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Lighting Plan
  • Usually drawn by Lighting Designer
  • Shows the Designers requirements for equipment
  • Types
  • Position
  • Colour
  • Channel Numbers
  • The main tool for communicating lighting
    information
  • Often has to be prepared before final runs

76
Focusing and Plotting
  • Lighting Designer and LX Department focus each
    light in the rig
  • Lighting Designer, Director and Operator program
    all lighting cues, and set timings
  • Lighting Designer gives cue points for all cues
    to Deputy Stage Manager

77
Technical Rehearsals
  • Timings and sequences of cues are confirmed
  • Lighting states, focusing and blocking tweaked
    and adjusted
  • Plotting finished if not completed already
  • Actors familiarised with Lighting states and
    effects
  • Operators begin to learn and practicse cues

78
Dress Rehearsals Previews
  • Lighting Designer, Director and others watch and
    take notes to perfect lighting states
  • Operators and DSM learn and become confident with
    cue sequences
  • Timings are tweaked as the rhythm of the show
    beds down

79
Press Night
  • Lighting Designer hands over production to
    relighter, operator and technical team
  • Creative team enjoy the feeling of having
    relinquishing control and discovering whether it
    is, in fact, all right on the night.

80
Now its your turn!
  • In groups, light one person to communicate an
    emotion
  • Anger, Fear, Sadness, Joy, Disgust, Surprise,
    Curiosity, Love (or another if you wish)
  • Try to communicate solely through lighting
  • Explore ways of manipulating all the properties
    of light that we have looked at
  • Try to avoid letting other groups know what
    emotion you have selected
  • At the end of the preparation time each group
    will present and discuss their scene

81
Conclusion
  • There are many properties of light and many ways
    of using these to support a production
  • Used correctly, lighting has an exceptional power
    to create and support powerful moments of theatre

82
Targets
  • By the end of the session, the student
  • Will be aware of the different roles within a
    Lighting department
  • Will have a basic understanding of the main
    creative properties of light and how these can be
    manipulated
  • Will have been introduced to different styles of
    lighting design and the ways in which the style
    of lighting can interact with the style of the
    piece.
  • Will understand the outline of the Lighting
    Design process
  • Will have demonstrated methods of communicating
    information through lighting

83
Conclusion
  • Any Questions?

84
Lighting and Storytelling
  • The influence of Lighting Design
  • On Dramaturgy
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